They Tell Us “See Something, Say Something.” Well, I See Something

The Department of Homeland Security regularly warns us to be aware of our surroundings and to watch for suspicious activity. They also warn us to watch for actions that may look harmless, but might also be a symptom of a more serious threat.

Some of us wonder if being so suspicious of our fellow citizens is a good thing, but I say the price of freedom is eternal vigilance and we should be ready to make judgments when we see dangerous activity. So let me take this opportunity to tell you what I see.

I see a government approaching levels of totalitarian control that was unimaginable even a few years ago. The Fourth Amendment to the Constitution, which protects you from unreasonable search and seizure, is gone. Nude body scanners and invasive pat down searches are a prerequisite for air travel. The supreme court agrees the government has the authority to strip search you at any time for any reason, even if you are arrested for a simple traffic stop.

I see a society willing to accept widespread surveillance previously imagined only in the most outlandish dystopian science fiction. A new government facility will centralize all electronic information about every citizen, including emails, phone calls, and purchase history into one easily searchable database. Virtually every citizen will have a file.

In addition, they are working with private contractors to create street lights capable of taking pictures, recording conversations and even transmitting government messages. Linked with the NSA’s data center, its conceivable the government could amass a database of citizens’ private conversations. Meanwhile, weaponized remotely controlled drones are becoming common place across the country to monitor the activities of everyday Americans.

I see a supposedly “liberal” and “progressive” Democratic administration which claims the authority to unilaterally indefinitely detain without trial, anyone under the mere suspicion that they are a terrorist. Further they claim the authority to extradite American citizens to “foreign entities” where they can be tortured without limit. There is no judicial review. It is also attempting to intimidate and silence whistleblowers. To date, this administration has charged more people with crimes under the Espionage Act than all other presidencies combined.

I see a central bank, whose money printing, despite arguments to the contrary, has massively increased the wealth of the elite banking and investor class, while slowly destroying the value of the dollar and the purchasing power of the working poor. If a new reserve currency is introduced it will rapidly increase this trend.

I see a regulatory system whose budget has been cut and cut again to save money. Even revenue producing agencies like the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) have been crippled, forced to accept pitiful settlements from thieves in the banking system who admit no wrongdoing.

I see the use of “free speech zones” to corral and silence protesters. We have a militarized police force that uses bulldozers, rubber bullets, sound cannons and chemical weapons on citizens whose simple demand is that the rule of law be enforced. A thoroughly corrupt government has only two ways to control the population, fraud and force, and when fraud is exposed, force is all they have left.

I see financial austerity and privatizations being imposed on unwilling people all over the world when nations are at their weakest and most prone to crisis. Even when the cuts and privatizations prove to be more costly than doing nothing, the establishment still demands more selling and austerity. Public parks, bridges, roads, waterways, everything must be sold off even though default is a fundamental element of capitalism.

Almost all of these offenses are relatively new abuses. The corruption in government is accelerating quickly and our most basic rights are evaporating. While it has always been corrupt and needing of supervision, the government now claims tyrannical powers equal to the most suppressive nations in human history. Our leaders tell us these infringements on our civil liberties is necessary to ensure our way of life, but as Charles Hugh Smith recently noted, this is an Orwellian reversal of what the founding fathers had in mind. Civil liberties ARE our way of life.